Fernando Tatis Jr. looks to be a āreal playerā in Padresā postseason
Padres shortstop knows October is the month where lasting stars shine
The National League MVP award was practically being engraved with his name when Fernando Tatis Jr. had a September to forget.
So he did.
There was more baseball to be played, and sometimes the best tool even a five-tool player can have is a short memory.
Besides, October is when legacies are made.
āReal players make real history in the postseason,ā Tatis said Monday. āSo definitely, itās huge to me.ā
The Padresā postseason continues Tuesday with the start of the National League Division Series against the Dodgers.
A legend can grow at any time, especially in these times, almost without regard to importance.
The level beyond legend is legacy, which requires impact. A legacy is made of substance.
Tatis is already legendary. But itās 2020, so thatās not really what it used to be.
His brand of cool is made for social media and a world in perpetual need of instant thrill. Those dyed-blonde locks, that smile, those moves. That talent. His penchant for the big hit and the big celebration.
He really is Godās gif to mankind.
Certainly, there is value in being outstanding in the regular season.
Tatisā 17 home runs were second most in the National League. Tatis led the Padres with 49 runs created. He led the major leagues with seven outs above average. His energy and penchant for fun keeps veterans young and was high on the list of things that charged the Padresā resilience this season.
āOff the charts,ā catcher Austin Nola said of what Tatis brings to the Padres on the field and off. āYou can watch it. It brings everybodyās energy level up when heās so enthusiastic playing the game.ā
All season, opposing managers and players talked freely about how good Tatis was. A theme heard repeatedly was that they had seen highlights and read the scouting reports but were even more impressed by what they witnessed in person.
āHeās a star,ā Dodgers right fielder Mookie Betts said Monday. āHe does everything on the baseball field you can ask for. ⦠Heās got all the tools, the smarts. Heās got everything. Heās definitely a lot of fun to watch. Thereās also a lot of maturity there as well. Just got to tip your cap to somebody whoās that good who handles everything so well.ā
That includes expectations.
For all Tatis has done over the past two seasons ā and very few in history have produced as much as quickly ā he knows feats accomplished while playing for a trophy are the ones most vividly remembered.
āPostseason baseball is just special, man,ā he said.
Tatis has been a man for moments.
And in his first postseason, just when it seemed a moment had been found that was big enough to keep him in its shadow, he turned around a series.
When Tatis came to bat with runners at first and second with one out in the sixth inning of Game 2, the Padres were down 6-2 in a game they had to win. His three-run homer got the Padres to within 6-5, and Manny Machado tied the game by following Tatisā home run with one of his own. Wil Myers and Tatis homered in the seventh, and Myers added another homer in the eighth as the Padres won 11-9.
Tatis had struck out twice with runners in scoring position in Game 2 after striking out and grounding out with runners in scoring position the night before. In his Game 1 strikeout, he chased three pitches outside the zone.
He looked at least a little out of sorts, especially for a player who has shown uncanny calm since making his major league debut on opening day in 2019 as a 20-year-old.
āWeāre playing in the playoffs,ā he said when asked if he had experienced nerves in the opener. āFirst time Iāve been in the playoffs. Youāre going to feel that spark inside you no matter what.ā
After starting 2-for-7 and going 0-for-4 with runners in scoring position, Tatis had two home runs and a double in his final four at-bats in the series. In the three games against the Cardinals, he scored five runs and drove in five and got on base at a .571 clip.
That he overcame the nerves and delivered is due to what Padres manager Jayce Tingler called āthe combo platterā of physical and mental ability Tatis and a select few possess.
āWhat heās doing is extremely hard, especially being 21 years old and youāre carrying natural emotions,ā Tingler said. āIn this game, youāre going to have some small pockets of the game where things donāt go your way. But I think maturity and the more he gets experience to continue to keep pushing, to keep grinding, to keep fighting, when you can do those things, the talent usually plays out at the end.ā
With his home runs, Tatis blew up any thought he might start his career on a Mike Trout trajectory.
Tatis hitting .065 (2-for-31) over nine games in the middle of September likely will keep Tatis from joining the Angelsā star in being a league MVP. But Trout would almost certainly at least consider trading one of his three American League MVP awards for more chances in the postseason. Maybe heād trade all three for a World Series ring.
Trout has been to the playoffs once in his nine big-league seasons. He went 1-for-12 with a home run and three walks in the 2014 AL Division Series.
It wonāt be surprising if regular season hardware comes at some point for Tatis. He could win a Gold Glove this year.
The postseason, he knows, is more valuable than all that.
āI feel like thereās way more to play for,ā he said. āItās just the energy and vibe it brings with itself, itās a great moment.ā
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